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Dive into the research topics where Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan is active.

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Featured researches published by Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan.


International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management | 2009

Spillover effects of foreign hypermarkets on domestic suppliers in Malaysia

Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Rokiah Alavi; Kalthom Abdullah; Muhammad Arif Zakaullah

– Since the mid‐1990s, there has been a rapid expansion of large‐scale foreign retailers in many countries across Southeast Asia, Central Europe and Latin America. This emerging trend has triggered a number of research interests on the issue of retail globalization. The research aims to consider the entry of foreign hypermarkets in Malaysia and their impact on the development and growth of domestic suppliers and manufacturers., – This study uses both primary and secondary data. Secondary data were drawn from industry sources which included government departments, economic reports, retailing magazines and companies, web sites. Meanwhile, primary data are collected using mail survey questionnaire and face‐to‐face interviews., – The findings of this study indicate that foreign hypermarkets play a very important role in the development and growth of the domestic suppliers via backward linkages. The main forms of linkages are product supply, informational linkages, assistance with inventory management, technical support and quality assurance and procurement systems. A majority of the firms indicated that they benefited substantially from the presence of foreign hypermarkets; however, they also face several challenges brought about by imposition of several unfair terms and procurement policy., – The findings are largely derived from the experience encountered by domestic firms who participated in the survey. Thus, it is believed that their views could definitely help all the parties including the policymakers and researchers to better understand the impact of foreign hypermarkets on local businesses and take appropriate policy measures.


International Journal of Social Economics | 2015

Effect of foreign aid on corruption: evidence from Sub-Saharan African countries

Masoud Rashid Mohamed; Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Normaz Wana Ismail; W. N. W Azman-Saini

Purpose - – The purpose of this paper is to examine the effect of foreign aid on corruption in Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries. Foreign aid is aimed to promote economic growth by complementing the recipient country’s shortfall of financial resource. However, if the recipient country’s quality of governance and institutions is poor, the process of growth will be undermined. Since foreign aid to SSA countries has been increasing substantially in recent years, it is imperative to explore its impact on the level of corruption in the SSA countries. Design/methodology/approach - – The paper opted to use a Quantile regression (QR) approach to examine the impact of foreign aid on corruption. The data cover from the year 2000 to 2010 for 42 Sub-Saharan countries. QR is appropriate to achieve the stated objective because the method enables to examine the effect of aid on at different level of corruption. Findings - – The paper provides empirical insights on the impact of foreign aid on corruption level in SSA countries. The finding indicates that foreign aid has reduction effect on the corruption level of SSA countries. The effect is likely to be greater in nations that experience a higher level of corruption. The findings further reveal that aid from different bilateral sources has different effect on corruption. As a whole, the findings are statistically significant and robust to alternative measure of corruption. Research limitations/implications - – Since the study just focus on Sub-Saharan African countries, the research findings may lack generalization to the entire African countries or poor developing countries that are receiving substantial amount of foreign aid. Therefore, future research should incorporate all the African countries or all poor developing countries. Practical implications - – Since the empirical findings reveals that aid reduces the corruption level and aid from different bilateral source have different effect on corruption, it is important to establish more cooperation between donor countries in allocating aid. The conditions attached to aid should be, among other things, be related with improvement of governance and institutional environment. Allocation of aid should be selective such that countries in institutional quality should be among the important criteria for a country to qualify for aid. Originality/value - – This paper fulfills the need to study the relationship between foreign aid and corruption in the case of SSA countries. The aid-corruption nexus is relatively under explored issue especially in the case African countries.


International Journal of Social Economics | 2017

Impact of health capital on economic growth in Singapore: an ARDL approach to cointegration

Idowu Opeoluwa Isreal Akingba; Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Hanny Zurina Hamzah

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyze the long-term impacts of health capital on economic growth in Singapore from 1980 to 2013. Design/methodology/approach Autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL)-ECM methodology and several diagnostic and specification tests were used to estimate the impact of health capital on economic growth on time series data covering the period 1980-2013. Findings The results confirm that health capital (measure by health expenditure per capita) positively and significantly affects Singapore’s economic growth in the long run. In addition, the equilibrium error correction coefficient lagged by one in the short-run is approximately 83.25 percent for all estimated variables, implying a considerably high speed of long-term adjustment to equilibrium following a short-term shock. Moreover, the Toda-Yamamoto’s Granger causality estimation reveals that there is a unidirectional causality from health expenditure per capita to GDP per capita. Research limitations/implications The findings imply that Singapore’s economic growth could be improved significantly if expenditure on health capital is increased. This eventually would have a substantial impact on human productivity which leads to improved output per capita. Thus, policy makers and/or the government should strive to create institutional capacity to improve basic health service by strengthening the health institutions infrastructure that produces healthy and quality manpower. Originality/value Grounded on the premises that there are little or no studies on the impact of health capital on Singapore economy, this paper provides new evidence on the potential effect of health capital on Singapore’s economic growth over the last three decades. Also, this study explore the causal effect (unidirectional or bidirectional) between health capital and economic growth.


Procedia. Economics and finance | 2016

The Impact of Trade Liberalization on Tax Structure in Developing Countries

Mohammad Karimi; Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Normaz Wana Ismail; Hanny Zurina Hamzah

Abstract In this paper, we investigate the impact of trade liberalization on tax structure in a panel 97 developing countries for the period 1993-2012. Our empirical results, based on the fixed-effect estimator, reveal that trade liberalization in the form of trade openness did not seem to have a strong impact on major tax sources of developing countries. Instead, trade liberalization in the form of tariff reduction seems to have a contribution to tax structure in these countries.


Archive | 2013

Determinants of international tourism in Malaysia: evidence from gravity model

Siti Shuhada Ahmad Kosnan; Normaz Wana Ismail; Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan


Archive | 2013

Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) and Economic Growth: Empirical Evidence from Southern Africa Customs Union (SACU) Countries

Najat Nassor Suleiman; Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Normaz Wana Ismail


Archive | 2017

Service export and economic growth in the selected developing Asian countries

Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Siti Asiah Ahmad; Normaz Wana Ismail


Archive | 2014

Impact of foreign aid and foreign direct investment on economic growth:evidence from Sub-Saharan African countries

Masoud Rashid Mohamed; Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Normaz Wana Ismail; W. N. W Azman-Saini


Archive | 2017

Intersectoral linkages of Malaysian batik industry: an application of input-output analysis

Noor Haslina Mohamad Akhir; Normaz Wana Ismail; Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Rusmawati Said


GeoJournal | 2017

Can well-being between Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) member countries converge?

Peter Adamu; Shivee Ranjanee Kaliappan; Abdalla Sirag; Ruth John Chenbap

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Mohammad Karimi

Universiti Putra Malaysia

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Abdalla Sirag

Universiti Putra Malaysia

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Kalthom Abdullah

International Islamic University Malaysia

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Muhammad Arif Zakaullah

International Islamic University Malaysia

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Rokiah Alavi

International Islamic University Malaysia

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Rusmawati Said

Universiti Putra Malaysia

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